IIAS Newsletter 30

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Atul Dodiya, Dr. Patels’s Clinic-Lamington Road (1995). Harsh Goenka, Bombay. (fragment)

Website: www.IIAS.nl < Theme:

Psychiatry in Asia 30

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> Asian art & cultures

Debra Diamond visited the traveling exhibition of Chola Bronzes [5] and places these statues in a tradition of worship and beauty. p.41 ¶ Nina Cichocki shows the connection between the work of Irans leading sculptor, Parviz Tanavoli and traditional Persian writing. [6]. p.42 ¶ Freek Colombijn and Peter Nas attend us to the intentions and planning beyond largely unchecked megaurbanization [7]. p.49 ¶

> Publications

Roald Maliangkay reviews the first English language book on Korean film p.30 ¶ With his review of Moral Tales Nile Green provides a valuable insight in the rich universe of Indian storytelling [4], p.33 ¶

> In this edition

Koen De Ceuster wonders whether Korean historians are shedding light on the nations recent history or are merely adding to the confusion [1].p.3 ¶ In A Martyr’s Tale [2], IIAS fellow Ken Hammond tells the story of a strong willed Ming dynasty official and his rehabilitation in post-communist China. p. 14 ¶ The connection between algebra and Asia is laid bare in Frits Staal’s article on Artificial Languages. p.15 ¶ Eurasians in India are the living proof of a blurry divide between colonizer and colonized. [3]. p 16 ¶ The essence of being good in Tantric Buddhism, lies in being bad. p. 17 ¶ Both Jemma Purdey and Bernard Adeney-Risakotta examine the connection between power and violence in Indonesia. p 24-25 ¶

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March 2003 | the IIAS newsletter is published by the IIAS and is available free of charge

From Aristocrats to Primitives An Interview with Gananath Obeyesekere Interview > South Asia

Gananath Obeyesekere lives on a mountaintop in Kandy. From his eyrie he has a sweeping panorama of the eastern hills of Sri Lanka, and it is in those hills where the wild Veddas were once supposed to have lived, according to Sri Lankan histories and stories. These Veddas are the focus of his present research. By Han ten Brummelhuis

T

he genealogy of Obeyesekere’s research project can be traced back to a classic work, The Veddas, written by Charles and Brenda Seligmann in 1911. The Veddas were first recognized in anthropological terms as a classic hunting and gathering society. Edward Tylor, in his textbook on anthropology (1881), refers to them as ‘shy wild men’, or primitives, living by hunting and gathering. The Seligmanns, however, pioneered with one of the first field studies of any group from the British side of our discipline. C.G. Seligmann and W.H.R. Rivers were the first systematic fieldworkers who, in turn, taught the two great anthropologists Radcliffe-Brown and Malinowski, the founding fathers of British Social Anthropology. ‘What I found puzzling about the Seligmanns’ study is that the Veddas were confined by them to a small area in the northern and eastern part of the country called Bintanna, ‘the flat lands.’ Unfortunately, given that their work was still rooted in the nineteenth-century preoccupation with the primitive, the two Seligmanns were out to find the ‘pure’ Veddas; and of course they didn’t find any. This was a kind of futile quest, because ultimately only four families, who were living in utterly desperate economic and social conditions, were found to approximate their ideal. Looking from my balcony up on my hilltop, I know that the mountainous area north of the Seligmanns’ field site was known in ancient Sinhala texts of nearly three hundred years ago as ‘the Vedda country,’ or as ‘the great [maha] Vedda country’, a huge expanse of well over a thousand square miles. But in my wanderings and meanderings in that latter region I found that there are no Veddas today; all who live there claim to be Sinhala Buddhists. So the question that posed itself to me was: whatever

happened to the Veddas who once lived in this part of the country? ‘Then, as my fieldwork and thinking progressed, I asked myself: if the Veddas were in this vast region north of the area in which the Seligmanns did their fieldwork, let me figure out whether they existed in other parts of the country, too. So I probed the sixteenth-century classic literature and poetry written by Buddhist monks and other erudite scholars. And some of their texts refer to Veddas in other parts of the country, for example, roughly around Sri Pada – sometimes known as Adam’s Peak – where the sacred footprint of the Buddha is embedded. Other texts speak of Veddas in the very south of Sri Lanka which is now entirely – and passionately – Sinhala Buddhist. Another text refers to Veddas living about twenty miles south of the main city of Colombo which is unthinkable as a Vedda habitat nowadays, except symbolically, I suppose, if one were to designate capitalism as a form of hunting and gathering.’ Obeyesekere also re-examined some of the ritual texts which he had worked on some twenty or thirty years ago. These texts also referred to Veddas as living in different parts of the country. In one fascinating post-harvest ritual the priest (never the monk) recites an invocation known as ‘the roll-call of the Veddas’ in which he lists about ninety Vedda villages in a fairly large area north and south of Kandy, and some settlements in the heart of the city of Kandy itself. Further enquiries led Obeyesekere to believe that when the city of Kandy was founded in the fifteenth century it was a Vedda village named Katupulle, the chief of that village being known as Katupulle Vedda. Very much later, Kandyan texts mention a group of police officers called katupulle; the same term. continued on page 3

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